Burlington’s Coley David had a field day in Byers on Saturday in the Terry Amundson Invitational. The senior captured the 100-meter dash (11.44 seconds), set a meet record in the 400 (50.53) and won the triple jump with a leap of 41 feet, 4.75 inches.

Elbert freshman Lauren Pearson won both the 200- and 400-meter sprints.

The team titles went to Strasburg on the boys’ side and Burlington in girls.

Once again, we’ve teamed up with chsaa.tv. This time, it means we will have every single state tournament basketball game from here on out available to watch live on our site, as well as a replay after each game is over.

It concludes with Saturday’s action, which includes the 4A and 5A boys basketball championships.

The state hockey bracket will be released Sunday. After last night’s events, we have something of a clearer picture in terms of what that bracket might look like.

Ralston Valley gave Regis Jesuit its first loss of the season on Tuesday. It means the Mustangs now control their own destiny when it comes to locking up the No. 1 seed out of the Foothills Conference.

The Raiders are 12-1-0 in conference play, the determining factor when it comes to seeding. They have a date with Rampart remaining, but, as a nonconference game, it’s nothing of consequence.

Ralston Valley (9-1-0), meanwhile, has three conference tilts left. If the Mustangs win out, the conference title, and No. 1 seed is theirs by way of a head-to-head tiebreaker with Regis.

Mountain Vista currently sits in a tie for fourth in the Peak Conference, while Kent Denver is sixth in the Foothills Conference.

The state hockey tournament begins February 24th. Here’s how things are shaping up:

Regis Jesuit, unbeaten, but not unchallenged, sits in the driver’s seat as the state hockey tournament approaches later this month.

The Raiders (15-0-0) control their own fate in terms of wrapping up the No. 1 seed out of the Foothills Conference, but one big hurdle remains: Ralston Valley.

Regis Jesuit hasn’t played since a 3-2 overtime win over Resurrection Christian on Jan. 28 — the team’s closest game of the season. But the school starts a stretch of four games in seven days tomorrow evening against Standley Lake.

After a date with Summit — a team fighting for its playoff life — on Saturday, the Raiders will play Ralston Valley on Feb. 14. That game could very well decide the Foothills Conference title.

Kozan, who will play in tomorrow’s Semper Fidelis All-American Bowl, has already taken visits to Iowa, Ohio State, Michigan and Auburn. He originally was considering announcing a college choice during the game’s broadcast, but he told rivals.com that he didn’t “really feel like I’m ready right now and if I’m not ready I’m not going to rush into anything.”

Denver East could wind up as one of the two Class 5A holders from the Denver Prep League.

There’s a sweeping change to the latest draft of the proposed football classification and league alignment — and it has nothing to do with all the commotion surrounding Valor Christian.

According to a copy of the draft obtained by The Denver Post, the Denver Prep League will cease to exist in football for the 2012-14 cycle. Instead of the proposed seven-team league — which had Kennedy leaping from 3A to 5A — only Lincoln and Denver East will remain in 5A, and those two schools won’t even be in the same conference.

Lincoln will become the sixth team in the East Metro league, joining Brighton, Northglenn, Prairie View, Thornton and Westminster. Denver East will join the Aurora league with Adams City, Aurora Central, Gateway and Hinkley and Rangeview.

George Washington, Montbello, Denver South and Kennedy will each move to 4A, while Thomas Jefferson will drop down to 3A.

Links to this week’s Wild Card point standings after Week 7, as released by CHSAA: Class 5A, 4A, 3A, 2A.

Remember: Wild Card points are used as the lone criteria in determining the 5A (32 teams) and 4A (16 teams) brackets, though actual seeding may vary.

In 3A, the top seven seeds will come from the conference champion, and the No. 8 seed will be the highest ranked team (based on Wild Card points) that’s not a conference champion. The remaining eight qualifiers will come from Wild Card points, but seeded by a committee. Seeds Nos. 1-7 will also be determined by the committee.

In 2A, the top two teams from each conference automatically qualify (12 of the 16-team field), and the four remaining spots go to non-automatic qualifying teams who rank the highest in the Wild Card points standings. (A committee of administrators will then seed the field.)

The Mustangs lead a group of the three remaining unbeaten 5A squads — Grand Junction, No. 1 in the Denver Post media poll, and Columbine being the others — with 102.000 points. Of note: Mullen is sitting at No. 8, up from No. 11 at last look, and Regis has gone from No. 24 to No. 13.

Taking a look at these rankings, you’ll see that the formula is heavily based on straight wins and losses.

Neil Devlin, originally from the Philadelphia area, has covered high school sports in Colorado for more than 30 years, writing about the people, athletes and events that encompass the Rocky Mountain prep sports world.